Sunday, October 3, 2010

Hardware Reviews Part 1

Here is the first in a series of reviews of hardware that I have used for music making. Remember, 5 is actually average.

Korg nanoKEY - $50  (5.5/10) 
You have to keep in mind that this score takes price into account. This little guy is total shit compared to a normal full midi keyboard. It goes great with a laptop though, having a similar feel to a computer keyboard, but it only has two octaves limiting its use as an actual playing keyboard. I've found that it's surprisingly good for triggering drum samples. I bought two of these, a white and a black. The white one broke after about a month of playing, but the black one still works well today.

Successes
-Portable
-Cheap
-Cool design



Failures
-That fucking CC Mode button is too close to the keys
-Doesn't play much like a normal keyboard
-One seemed to break easily

M-Audio KeyRig 49 - $100 (6.5/10) 
The KeyRig (any of them in the series) is worth well more than two nanoKEYs at twice the price. The keys don't feel much like a piano, but that's fine if you're mainly using it for synth. My main problem with this keyboard is the shitty USB plug in the back that got fucked up after a few months causing me to have to hold it at a certain angle with duct tape. Then it stopped working altogether. It was pretty good while it lasted. 

Successes
-Decent keyboard feel
-Plenty of keys


Failures
-That fucking god awful USB plug


Behringer U-Control UMX610 - $170 (8/10)
The UMX610 really does a beautiful job at being a USB/MIDI keyboard. It has a great feel, with realistically weighted keys, and plenty of knobs to assign to whatever you want. It also has a professional looking design, which is hard to find in a fairly cheap USB keyboard. If you have the money, I'd definitely recommend this. Behringer knows what they're doing with this one.
 Successes
-Great feel
-Plenty of octaves
-Lots of knobs
-Sexy body

Failures
-Similar plug problems to the KeyRig 49, but to a lesser extent
-There are fucking dog hairs all over my keys

10 comments:

  1. That Behringer looks pretty cool. I've never used a midi-keyboard for anything live, so I probably wouldn't need half the controllers...hopefully mine would be void of your dog hairs.
    It would just look right though.
    Pretty handy review.

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  2. The Akai LPK25 is the perfect replacement for a nanoKey. Better quality, feels better, keys are actually, ya know, keys, etc. Still crappy, but gets the job done better.

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  3. I'll have to look into that. Sounds promising.

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  4. Look sexy as...

    Sharin' some lovin'

    australiascrapas.blogspot.com

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